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Workforce Development:

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Title: The CT Latino Behavioral Health System (CT LBHS): Creating a Culturally and Linguistically Competent Workforce Author: Michelle Silva Last modified by – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Workforce Development:


1
  • Workforce Development
  • Recruitment and Retention

2
Todays Agenda
3
A Brief Summary
  1. About the CT LBHS
  2. Recruitment and Retention
  3. Evaluation Process
  4. Future Directions

4
I. Mission Statement
  • The Connecticut Latino Behavioral Health System
    (CT LBHS) represents a united effort to expand,
    enhance, and evaluate a network of treatment
    services through unique workforce development
    initiatives created from regional partnerships
    and tailored to meet the specific behavioral
    health needs of the adult Latino community.

5
II. Recruitment
  • Where we started
  • Fall of 2005 Developing the initial proposal
  • Winter 2006 Advocating at the state legislature
  • July 2007 Awarded the first two years of funding
  • How we recruited
  • Consensus among hiring agencies for initial job
    announcement
  • Local and national search
  • Professional list-serves internet-based
    employment sites
  • 32 APA-accredited pre- and post-doctoral training
    sites
  • 38 regional colleges and universities
  • 12 state and national professional organizations
    (i.e., NLPA,
  • LSWO, NASW, CPA)

6
Contd
  • Who contacted us
  • 39 bilingual professionals with varied
    credentials and training experiences (i.e., LPC,
    BSW, LCSW, PhD, PsyD, APRN, CASAC, MD)
  • What we screened for
  • credentials, experience with Latina/o
    populations, overall fit based on agency need
  • Results
  • 10 full-time, 2 part-time clinical positions,
    effort of psychiatry time
  • 3 MSWs, 1 LCSW, 2 Masters-level substance abuse
    counselors, 3 Predoctoral fellows, 3 Postdoctoral
    Fellows
  • Relevant training experiences ranged from
    international work at UN refugee operations to
    years of living and working in local New Haven
    area with Latina/o community

7
Retention Efforts
  • Ensuring competitive salaries
  • National median salary for social workers in
    outpatient mental health and substance abuse
    centers 34,290 (U.S. Dept. of Labor,
    Occupational Outlook Handbook, 2008-09 Edition)
  • CT LBHS median salary 57,000
  • Hosting monthly meetings with clinicians
    (familismo)
  • Appointing new clinical faculty to provide
    supervision to incoming students
  • Providing the CT LBHS Training Academy (focus
    groups on-site competency based CEUs)
  • Supporting additional professional training
    opportunities (conferences)
  • Renewing annual license fees
  • Serving as qualified site for the NIH HRSA Loan
    Repayment Programs
  • Clinical supervision and mentorship

8
III. Evaluation Levels
  • Level I Organizational
  • Level II Staff
  • Level III Client
  • Overall Evaluation of Implementation Process

9
Organizational Level
  • Cultural Competency Index (CCI) completed every
    four months by staff and leadership
  • Sampling of items
  • Management strategy
  • Community and consumer involvement
  • Supervision
  • Direct service support
  • Linguistically sensitive staff, documents, and
    materials
  • Collection of accurate demographics
  • Evaluation of ongoing cultural competence
  • Structures and procedures

10
  • Staff Level
  • Pre- and post-training/consultation evaluation
  • CT LBHS clinician evaluation
  • Implementation of treatment (clinician checklist
    random tape rating)
  • Latino cultural constructs
  • Therapeutic alliance
  • Clinician satisfaction
  • Client Level
  • Set of instruments to assess treatment outcome at
    baseline, four months after baseline, and eight
    months after baseline
  • Instruments assess
  • Mental health and substance use disorders (BSI,
    LDQ, TLFB))
  • Readiness to change (URICA)
  • Coping strategies (Brief COPE)
  • Ethnic experience (SEE)
  • Latino cultural constructs
  • Therapeutic alliance (TCS)
  • Quality of life
  • Client satisfaction

11
Evaluation of the Implementation Process
  • Focus groups and individual interviews
  • Consumers
  • LBHS leadership
  • Agency leadership
  • LBHS clinicians

12
In Summary, our Key Ingredients
  • FINDING A COMMITTED, DEDICATED, SKILLED
    WORKFORCE
  • TIMING
  • CONFIANZA, PERSONALISMO, RESPETO
  • CONSENSUS
  • POSITIVE COMMUNITY RELATIONSHIPS
  • ADVOCACY LEGISLATIVE SUPPORT
  • SHARED RESOURCES
  • INTELLECTUAL
  • PHYSICAL
  • HISTORY OF OUR TRAINING PROGRAM
  • MENTORSHIP (support system)

13
IV. Future Directions
  • Implementing a consultation model for agency
    supervisors
  • Ongoing assessment of job satisfaction
  • Addressing issues of sustainability and seeking
    new funding sources
  • Expanding the training program
  • Developing practicum placements w/tracks based on
    professional interests (undergraduate and
    graduate level)
  • Disseminating information (www.ctlbhs.org, La
    VisiĆ³n, Community Defined Evidence Project)

14
  • GRACIAS!
  • manuel.paris_at_yale.edu
  • michelle.silva_at_yale.edu
  • luis.aneznava_at_yale.edu
  • luis.bedregal_at_yale.edu
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